Sunday, June 24, 2012

Drugs by Design


     Designer shoes, clothes, luggage - today, the name tag of companies such as Gucci or Prada add 'value' or, at least are often deemed more valuable by the purchaser than similar or even the same item without the cachet of the designer logo. These designer products cater to the consumer who wishes to be noticed and often feels the need to declare to the world that he or she has the wealth (and the sophistication) to own this special product.
Prada Men's Shoe

     Designer drugs have often been called 'research chemicals', 'bath salts', or 'plant food'. A discussion about 'designer drugs' is not about what you can afford or how the world sees you. A discussion about 'designer drugs' is, effectively, a discussion about chemistry.
     'Designer' substances are not (usually) created or consumed for reasons of vanity or glamour but rather have a more 'practical' purpose. Designer drugs are chemicals that have been created to avoid the restrictions of drug laws, altering the drug in question just enough to place it in a different class than the 'prohibited' substance but not altered enough that its effects are less significant.
'Designer' Drugs

     'Designing' of the new drug usually involves starting with the drug in question and modifying its chemical structure or occasionally by finding drugs with entirely different chemical structures that produce similar effects to (usually illegal) recreational drugs. These new substances can then be sold on the 'gray market' where little or no regulation is applied.
     The use of the term 'designer drug' was first used by in the 1980s but the first appearance of what would now be termed designer drugs occurred as early as the 1920s.
     Perhaps the best known of the early 'designer drugs' was a chemical alteration of morphine (a diacetyl ester), created in 1874 by an English chemist and then marketed as a cough suppressant in 1899 by Bayer Pharmaceuticals. The new drug was ten times more effective than codeine to treat coughs, was a better pain-killer than morphine, was safe and non-habit forming. They named it heroin (see post: AHistory of Heroin).

     The second International Opium Convention (Geneva, 1925) specifically banned morphine (other than by prescription) which led to heroin (as well as a number of alternative esters of morphine) to be manufactured and sold on the 'gray', but effectively still legal market. When heroin was declared illegal, the drug trade simply adapted.
     By 1925 in Egypt, narcotic addiction had become such a problem that a law was passed making trafficking as well as possession, criminal offences.  The price of narcotics increased significantly and the dangers of imprisonment for narcotics use sent users into hiding but chemistry came to their rescue.
     A chemist by the name of Dr. Hefti of Altstatten, a suburb of Zurich, began to produce a drug he called 'Dionyl' (see post: Dawn of the Drug Dealers), indistinguishable from heroin but different enough chemically that it could be sold without infringing Swiss narcotics laws.
Zurich

     Dionyl (acetylpropionylmorphine) is an opiate analogue, a derivative of morphine, developed in the early 1900s after first being synthesised in Great Britain in 1875 but shelved along with heroin and various other esters of morphine.
     Dionyl was never used medically but was sold as one of the first ' designer drugs' for around five years. The effects of this designer drug was virtually identical to heroin and consequently dionyl was  banned internationally in 1930 by the Health Committee of the League of Nations.
Morphine

     There were many other narcotic alterations, created to skirt the laws. Benzylmorphine  was a semi-synthetic narcotic, created in 1896. It was similar to codeine, except with a benzyl group attached to the basic morphine molecule just as the methyl group creates codeine. It is about 90 per cent as strong as codeine by weight.
     Diethyl ether (ethyl ether, ether, ethoxyethane), is a compound with the formula (C2H5)2O. It is a colorless and highly flammable liquid. It is used as a solvent, as fuel and was once used as a general anesthetic. Because of these anesthetic effects, it has also been used as a recreational drug.
     Ether was likely created by Jabir ibn Hayyan, a scientist 'of all trades', said to have been the first practical alchemist. He was an astronomer, an astrologer, an engineer, a geographer, philosopher, physicist, pharmacist and physician born in Persia in 721 AD.
Jabir ibn Hayyan

     Hayyan's creation was first synthesized in 1540 by Valerius Cordus (a sixteenth century German physician) who named it 'sweet oil of vitriol', synthesized by the distillation of ethanol with sulfuric acid (oil of vitriol).
     In the late 19th century, it was not considered proper for women to drink alcohol, and so a 'designer drug' was created. Instead, the women took extremely potent 'medicines' when the men did their drinking. One product was called 'Hoffmannstrophen' or 'Hoffmann's Drops', made up of 3 parts alcohol to 1 part ether.
     There was also 'compound spirit of ether', ('Hoffmann's anodyne', 'aetheris spiritus compositus'), a solution of ether and ethereal oil in alcohol, used as a painkiller or sedative. Its use as an anesthetic drug was introduced by Friedrich Hoffman, an 18th century German physician and chemist.
Valerius Cordus

     Ether will burn the mouth when taken straight but when mixed with alcohol it is possible to ingest orally. In the 19th century and early 20th century ether drinking became popular among Polish peasants. It is a traditional and still relatively popular recreational drug among Lemkos, a small ethnic group living in the Carpathian Mountains. The ether is consumed in a small quantity poured over milk or water with sugar or orange juice in a shot glass.
     In more recent times (1980s to present), the use of the term designer drug initially referred to various synthetic opioid drugs, based mostly on the fentanyl molecule (see post: A Basket Full of Narcotics).
     One, narcotic derivative called MPPP (desmethylprodine) was found to contain MPTP, an nerve toxin impurity which caused brain damage that could result in a syndrome identical to full-blown Parkinson's Disease, from just one dose. Other problems were highly potent fentanyl analogues, which were sold as China White (α-methylfentanyl) which caused several accidental overdoses.
Sweet Oil of Vitriol (Ether)

     One of the main problems for law makers faced with the onslaught of hundreds of new, often poorly-defined drugs which began to appear on the illicit market was how to develop legislation to ban or regulate their use. Frequently, novel drugs have appeared directly in response to legislative action, drugs similar to the compound that had recently been banned (just like Dionyl had been similar but not identical to heroin).
     Many of the chemicals fall under the various drug analogue legislations in certain countries, but Most countries do not have general analogue legislation, where, if a new drug is similar enough to the banned drug, it too is also banned. In these cases, novel compounds can fall outside of the law after only minor structural modifications.

Ethnic Lemkos
     The United States tried to address this problem with the Controlled Substances Act and the Controlled Substance Analogue Substance Analogue Enforcement of 1986, which attempted banned designer drugs pre-emptively by making it illegal to manufacture, sell, or possess chemicals that were substantially similar in chemistry and pharmacology to Schedule I or Schedule II drugs.
     In Germany, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Sweden, new drugs are banned when they become recognized as a danger. In Sweden, the police and customs are able to seize drugs that are not on the list of drugs covered by the anti-drug laws if the police suspect that the purpose of the holding is related to drug abuse.
     Australia has enacted legislation, banning drugs based on chemical structure alone, making chemicals illegal even before they are created. Even this type of law however, would still not cover drugs that have no structural similarity to any controlled drug, even if they produced similar effects.
     In the late 1990s and early 2000s, there was an explosion in designer drugs being sold over the internet. The term of 'research chemicals' was coined by some marketers of designer drugs in an attempt to by-pass the 'intent' clause of the U.S. 'analogue drug laws'. Despite this, by July, 2004, the 'Drug Enforcement Administration' (DEA) in 'Operation Web Tryp', raided multiple suppliers (JLF Primary Materials) and vendors ('RAC Research').
     These internet companies were knowingly carrying on business in a 'gray' area. The majority of these chemical suppliers sold 'research chemicals' in bulk form as powder, not as pills, as selling in pill form would invalidate the claims that they were being sold for non-consumptive research.
Amanita Muscaria

     JLF Primary Materials (also known as JLF Poisonous Non-Consumables) was a mail order company based in Elizabethtown, Indiana, specializing in plants and chemicals, especially those reputed to have psychoactive properties such as the mushroom, amanita muscaria (see post: The High Priest) and Trichocereus pachanoi, also known as the San Pedro cactus (see post: Drugs Used in Religion-The New World).
     The company made no claim as the quality of any of their products. and the JLF catalogue proudly bore 'The Longest Warning Label You've Ever Seen'. JLF stated in their advertisements that:
     'Our products are poisonous and are not intended for human or animal consumption. Do not take internally. JLF assumes no liability for damages resulting from prohibited use (abuse) of these products. Customer automatically accepts all responsibilities for any consequences incurred from said misuse or abuse. Check local and state laws before ordering.'
San Pedro Cactus

     But, 'designer drug' became best known with the increased use of MDMA (Ecstasy) during the mid 1980s. MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxy methamphetamine) is a synthetic, psychoactive drug that is chemically similar to the stimulant methamphetamine and the hallucinogen mescaline.
     The compound was first synthesized by Merck in 1912 but not put into use until the 1940s when it was tested as a 'truth drug' by the CIA.In the 1960s, an American biochemist, Alexander Shulgin, researching psychedelic drugs, tested MDMA on himself. Shulgin promoted the drug for 'therapeutic' possibilities and others began to use MDMA in marriage therapy and psychotherapy.
Dr. Alexander Shulgin

     


     The early alternative name for MDMA was 'Adam', a reference to the innocent 'inner child' from Eden. Once the euphoric effects of the drug became known, it became fashionable as early as 1984 in the Dallas 'Starck Club', known under the slang name of 'X' or 'X-T-C' (hence Ecstasy).
     By mid-1984, sale of MDMA was declared illegal and possession was illegal within the next 12 months. Ecstasy has become the 'drug of choice' at modern 'raves', gatherings with loud music and flashing lights, flooding the senses. There have been 3 phases associated with the ecstasy high. Within the first hour, your senses 'light up', you start 'rushing'. The next is the plateau stage, lasting about 4 hours followed by the last stage, a long, gentle 'comedown' and 'afterglow' which may last into the next day.
The Starck Club, Dallas

     MDMA produces feelings of increased energy, euphoria, emotional warmth, and distortions in time, perception, and tactile experiences, exerting its primary effects in the brain on neurons which use the neurotransmitter serotonin (see post: The Genetics of Drug Addiction).
     MDMA binds to the serotonin transporter and increases and prolongs the serotonin signal. Through several mechanisms, MDMA accentuates the effects of serotonin and also has similar effects on the neurotransmitter, norepinephrine, causing increased heart rate and blood pressure. MDMA also releases dopamine, but to a much lesser extent.
MDMA (Ecstasy)

     MDMA can produce confusion, depression, sleep problems, drug craving, and severe anxiety. These problems can occur soon after taking the drug or, sometimes, even days or weeks after taking MDMA. Chronic users perform more poorly than nonusers on certain types of cognitive or memory tasks. One study in nonhuman primates showed that exposure to MDMA for only 4 days caused damage to serotonin nerve terminals that was still evident 6 to 7 years later. 
     Phencyclidine (1-(1-phenylcyclohexyl)piperidine), commonly also known as PCP with street names such as angel dust, Cadillac, DOA (dead on arrival), peace pill, rocket fuel, synthetic marijuana, zombie and many others is a recreational dissociative drug (a type of hallucinogen which reduce or block signals to the conscious mind from other parts of the brain).
Phencyclidine (PCP)

     PCP was synthesized in 1926 and tested as a human anesthetic by US pharmaceutical company Parke Davis. Despite the production of halluciantions, manic episodes, disorientation and delirium, the drug was marketed for human use in 1959.
     Use in humans was abandoned because many patients became agitated, delusional and irrational while recovering from their operations. PCP use was eventually limited to anesthetizing and tranquilizing large animals but is now illegal, still sold on the street, made illegally in labs.
Parke Davis

     In its pure form, PCP is a white crystalline powder with a bitter taste. It can be mixed with dyes and can be sold in tablets, capsules and coloured powder. PCP is easily synthesized and is often passed off to street buyers as another drug such as methamphetamine, mescaline, LSD even THC.
     For smoking, it can be applied to parsley, oregano, even marijuana (called 'superweed', 'killerweed', 'supergrass' or 'peaceweed'). It is usually snorted or ingested but also, at times, injected.
     When smoked or snorted, PCP rapidly enters the bloodstream and then the brain. PCP acts by altering the distribution of the neurotransmitter glutamate in the brain, this neurotransmitter involved in a person's perception of pain, responses to the environment, and memory. PCP also alters dopamine levels in the brain.
     The effects of PCP on a person are unpredictable. The way a person feels after taking PCP depends on many factors such as age, body weight, and sex, the amount of PCP consumed, whether the person has eaten recently as well as the use of other drugs, including non-prescription, prescription, and street drugs. Short-term effects of PCP vary greatly and it is often impossible to predict the behaviour of someone who has taken the drug. PCP can produce feelings of well-being and relaxation in users but, in others, can induce severe traumatic effects such as feelings of anxiety, fear, panic, agitation and paranoia.
     Overdoses are life-threatening. Intoxication with PCP can cause convulsions, coma, hyperthermia and death (usually because breathing stops). There are no antidotes for PCP intoxication and comas resulting from PCP may last 7-10 days.
     Use of PCP over an extended period of time can lead to memory loss, difficulties speaking and thinking. These symptoms can last for a year or more after last use. Severe anxiety and depression are common and may continue indefinitely.
Ketamine

     Ketamine (initially known as CI-581)was synthesized in 1962 as a derivative of PCP by Parke Davis. Ketamine's shorter duration of action and made it favorable over PCP as a 'dissociative anesthetic'.  The FDA approved the drug for medical use in 1970 and ketamine anesthesia was first given to American soldiers during the Vietnam War. It is a rapid acting anesthetic drug used mainly by veterinarians and sometimes in human surgery.
     Commercial ketamine is a liquid while the street drug is usually sold as a powder. The powder may be dissolved in a liquid, snorted, or smoked in a cigarette. Ketamine dissolves in liquid and it is odourless and tasteless, allowing it to be slipped into drinks. Its sedative effects have been used to prevent victims from resisting sexual assault and for this reason, it can be referred to as a 'date rape' drug.
Ketamine Powder

     Ketamine is a NMDA receptor antagonists ( inhibits the action of, the N-Methyl d-aspartate receptor). Toxic changes in brain cells (Olney lesions) have been shown to be induced in the brain (of rats) by these dissociative anesthetics (ketamine and PCP).
     Known in the club scene as vitamine Kspecial K, breakfast cereal, kit-kat, and many other names, ketamine became popular in the early 1970s in dance clubs a s fashionable hallucinogenic. In the brain, the drug acts by redistributing the neurotransmitter glutamate which is involved in memory, learning, the perception of pain and responses to the environment.
Brain Scan Showing Evidence of Olney Lesions

     The speed at which ketamine reaches the brain varies greatly. After snorting the effects are usually felt within 1 to 10 minutes and can last for about one hour. When taken by mouth the effects are felt more slowly but may last up to four hours.
     Ketamine produces a drunken, dizzy feeling. Some people describe 'near-death' or 'out-of-body' experiences and sensations of weightlessness. This experience is often described as being in or 'going through the k-hole'.
     Ketamine produces vivid dreams or hallucinations which may be intense and terrifying can cause rapid loss of consciousness if injected. The drug can also produce the sensation that the mind is separated from the body (dissociation).

     Ketamine can cause vomiting. When taken in large amounts, ketamine may depress the central nervous system, leading to slower breathing, seizures, severe high blood pressure, coma and possibly death.  In large doses, like amphetamines, it can cause schizophrenia-like psychosis.
Through the 'K' Hole?

     Methaqualone (Known as Quaalude in North America, Mandrax (in combination with an anti-histamine) in Europe) is a sedative-hypnotic similar in effect to barbiturates. Methaqualone was first synthesized in India in 1951 and patented in the US in 1962 as a treatment for insomnia and as a muscle relaxant.

     David Bowie sang about 'Quaaludes and Red Wine' and the American novelist, Edmund White described the effects as 'twilight drowsiness, lowering of the pain threshold and a stripping away of the defences and inhibitions, leading some to take the drug for heavy 'S and M' sessions.'
David Bowie-'Quaaludes and Red Wine'

     Recreationally, the drug was called 'mandies', 'mandrake', 'mandrix' or 'disco biscuits') and 'luding out' was a popular college pastime. Smoking methaqualone, either alone or with additives was popular in the US during the mid-1970s.
     The drug was banned in 1984 but is still continued to be produced in illegal labs. Today, methaqualone is one of the most commonly used hard drugs in South Africa, due to its relatively low cost. It is known as M-pills, buttons, 'geluk-tablette' (happy tablets) or smarties and is crushed and mixed in a pipe with marijuana.

     Amyl nitrite, a compound with the formula  C5H11ONO was first used in the mid-1800s but became popular as an inhalant in gay dance clubs during the 1960s. This drug, along with its similar cousins, butyl nitrite, isobutyl nitrite and octyl nitrite were known as 'poppers' and often sold as incense or room deodorisers.  
     Trade names included Rush, Locker Room, Thrust and Lightening Bolt.
     Amyl nitrite is a vasodilator (it expands blood vessels and lowers blood pressure) and is used medically to treat heart disease such as angina and also to treat cyanide poisoning. Physical effects include decrease in blood pressure, headache, flushing of the face, increased heart rate, dizziness, and relaxation of involuntary muscles, especially the walls of blood vessel and the anal sphincter.

     The effects are rapid, typically within a few seconds and disappear soon after (within minutes). As an inhalant, the drug that induces a brief euphoric state, and when combined with other intoxicant stimulant drugs such as cocaine or ecstasy, the euphoric state intensifies and can be prolonged.
     All of these drugs - from morphine derivatives to sedatives to the euphorics of vasodilators - have been created or used for their 'psychoactive' properties, to attain pleasure, euphoria, shed anxiety or feel powerful. And there are literally hundreds more, some with mechanisms of action similar to the drugs discussed, others which mimic marijuana or other chemicals.
Rush 'Poppers'

     In the late 1990s and early 2000s, a new type of 'designer drug' came onto the scene, one which did not aim to bring pleasure to the user but rather enhance the user's performance, to make him/her faster, stronger, more agile. These new 'designer drugs' were the anabolic steroids created for competitive athletes.
     Steroids had been banned by the International Olympic Committee in 1976, but the huge number of different anabolic agents available for human and veterinary use overwhelmed the ability of laboratories to test for all available drugs had always lagged behind the ability of athletes (and their chemists/doctors) to find new compounds to enhance their performance.
   
Effects of Anabolic Steroids
     Many of the new compounds are undetectable with standard tests and, when a new test is devised, the chemist will often have already created the 'next generation' of anabolic drug which can slip under the radar of detection.

     'Bath salts' may resemble the sweet-smelling epsom salts some people put in their bath but, on the street, the term refers to the latest in 'designer drugs'. Known as 'Ivory Wave', 'Purple Wave', 'Vanilla Sky' and 'Bliss', these 'bath salts' have been the reason for thousands of calls to poison centers across the U.S. in 2011-2012.
     Methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV) is a stimulant which acts on certain neurotransmitters in the brain (norepinephrine-dopamine reuptake inhibitor). MDPV was developed in 1969 but started to be used as a designer drug in 2004. Bath salts containing MDPV  are sold as recreational drugs in gas stations and convenience stores labelled as 'bath salts'.

     Another chemical commonly found in 'bath salts' is mephedrone (4-methylmethcathinone) another synthetic stimulant (also known as meph, drone, and MCAT) in the same class as the amphetamines. The drug is manufactured in China and is chemically similar to the cathinone compounds found in the khat plant commonly chewed in eastern Africa and Yemen. It comes in the form of tablets or a powder, which users can swallow, snort or inject.
     Agitation, paranoia, hallucinations, high blood pressure, chest pain and the tendency to suicide (even days after the stimulating effects of the drug have worn off) are all commonly seen in cases of 'bath salt' consumption.
Methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV)

     In May 2012, police in Florida shot a man who was eating the face of his unconscious victim, 'the face-eater' having apparently consumed 'bath salts'.
     Designer drugs are perhaps a pharmacological 'arms race'. Laws backed by better detection lead to the development of a different or 'stealthier' compound, triggering new detection techniques and new laws which, of course, create the 'incentive' (because the market and the money are always there) to create another 'better research chemical', a 'better' designer drug.

   
Mephedrone

     *Designer drugs: subject of research for the novel The Judas Kiss- Amazon Kindle.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

A Basket-Full of Narcotics



'To numb' or 'to deaden', was the original meaning of 'narcotic', a term first used by the ancient Roman-Greek physician Galen.
Galen

     Originally, narcotic referred to any substance that relieved pain, dulled the senses, or induced sleep but today, the term is used in a number of ways. Strictly speaking, in medical terms, a narcotic is a substance that binds at opioid receptors (see post: The Genetics of Drug Addiction), cellular membrane proteins activated by substances such as heroin or morphine. Non-medical usage of the term 'narcotic' often refers to any illicit substance.
     From a legal perspective, 'narcotic' refers to opium, opium derivatives, and their semi-synthetic substitutes, but not always. In the United States of America, from a legal perspective, cocaine which is not a true narcotic is referred to as such because of its 'numbing' effects.
Papaver Somniferum
-The Opium Poppy

     So this term, 'narcotic' remains confusing. Historically, it has been used to refer to substances such as alcohol and tobacco (Edward Hitchcock, 1830), mandrake root, containing hallucinogenic alkyloids (Galen), cocaine and even cannabis. Today, legislation in many countries classifies cocaine and cannabis as 'narcotics'.

     The use of narcotics (substances that bind to opioid receptors) pre-dates history. The opium poppy (papaver somniferum) was (and still is) a prime source of the raw drug (opium).


Mandrake Roots

     Opium, which itself contains up to 12% morphine, was used by the Minoans, ancient Greeks, Egyptians and Sumerians. Many famous writers and artists have used opium in one form or another. Wars have been (and still are) fought over control of this drug.
   
     But the most common usage of narcotics today is in medicine and nowhere are narcotics more important than for surgery and in the operating theater.
     The historical importance of the opium poppy and the importance of narcotics in general in anaesthesia is noted by the Royal College of Anaesthetists (U.K.) which prominently displays the fruit and flower of the opium poppy on its coat of arms.


Opium 'Sap' on Poppy Bud




     These drugs, (opioid-receptor) narcotics, are obviously an important medical tool. Narcotics can relieve pain and promote sleep. But they can be as dangerous as they can be useful.
     Narcotics can induce euphoria, slow down and even stop a patient's breathing and can easily become addictive, forcing the user to seek out more of the drug in ever increasing doses as his/her metabolism becomes accustomed to the drug and demands more in order to achieve the same state of euphoria, the same 'high'.


     Most of us have heard of opium. Most of us are familiar with morphine but these two types of narcotics are only the earliest forms of the drug, the basic template(s) from which more sophisticated types of narcotic have been created.
The Royal College of Anaesthetists (UK)

     But how many kinds of narcotics are there? Close to one hundred if synthetic and semi-synthetic, antagonists and inverse-antagonists, metabolites and other derivatives are included. All are based on the structure of the morphine molecule (they all attach to similar opioid receptors).

     In medicine, there are different narcotics for different purposes - some act quickly, others more slowly; the effects of some last hours, others only minutes. Some are highly addictive.
     Historically, heroin was one of the best pain relievers ever created and was used for obstetrical cases even into the 1980s. Because of its highly addictive qualities, however, heroin is no longer used in the medical field.


Chemical Structure of Morphine


   
     Potency of the specific narcotic stands out as one of the most important (and dangerous) aspect of these newer narcotics. Fentanyl, for instance, can be given intravenously (IV) or even via a skin patch. Given by vein, it is more than 100 times as powerful as morphine, its effects are immediate but last less than one hour in the body (morphine may last up to 5 hours). The shorter lasting effects of fentanyl would suggest that this particular morphine derivative would be less appealing for drug abusers/street addicts but this is not always the case.


Chemical Structure of Heroin
     Known as 'street heroin', fentanyl has become a serious addiction among addicts in Estonia, where it first appeared during a heroin shortage. The light brown, sugary powder can be dissolved in water then injected but a dose as small as 2 milligrams can be lethal. Sufentanil is another morphine derivative, even more potent than fentanyl (up to 1000 times more potent than morphine).


     Below, is a summary of some narcotic medications and how they differ:

Drug(intravenous)    Relative Strength    Onset of Action    Duration of Action

morphine                          1.0                  20 minutes            1-2 hours


meperidine(pethidine)         0.1                  1 minute                2-4 hours


hydromorphone                10                    15 minutes             >5 hours


fentanyl                           75-125               immediate             0.5-1 hour


sufentanil                         500-1000           1.4-4 minutes            ?

     These operating room narcotics are very different one from the other. Some are long-acting but take a relatively long time for the effects to 'kick in' (morphine). Others have a quick onset, are short acting but are extremely powerful (fentanyl, sufentanil). How does the doctor administering these drugs (to the patient or to himself) make sure he is giving the correct narcotic? They are all the color of water...Mistakes are easy to make.


     *Physicians and drug addiction: subject of research for the novel Whip the Dogs - Amazon Kindle

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Jet Fuel for the Sex Machine


     Throughout the history of human evolution, there have been two types of drugs that mankind has chased after.
Aphrodite

     The first type is the drug that allows 'contact with the divine' (see post: Altered States of Consciousness), 'communication with the dead' (see post: A Drug to See the Dead) or drugs which allow the shaman to travel to the 'spirit world' (see post: The Shaman).
     The second type of drug that history has pursued is one that has rarely been restricted to certain persons or groups in society, such as the priest. It is not usually a drug which is kept secret, only to be brought out under special circumstances or during special occasions. It is a drug that answers to every human being's basic desire - the natural urge to reproduce, to have sex. The aphrodisiac is a substance which increases sexual desire or performance.

     It is named after Aphrodite (Venus in Roman mythology), the Greek goddess of love and sexuality. According to western medical science, there have been no substantiated claims that any particular food increases sexual desire or sexual performance.
The Birth of Venus (Botticelli)

   
     Throughout history, many foods, drinks, and behaviors have had a reputation for making sex more attainable and/or pleasurable. However, from a historical and scientific standpoint, the alleged results have been mainly due to mere belief by their users that they would be effective (placebo effect). Despite what we know to be true, that any aphrodisiac has an effect only because the user wants it to, the human mind still searches, not necessarily for the truth but rather, searches for what the mind wants to believe.
Hippocrates

     In ancient Greece, aphrodisiacs were highly prized and many different types of foods were said to have a positive effect on sexual performance - garlic, certain cheeses, wine. Hippocrates (460-377 BC), is said to have recommended lentils, cooked them with saffron for an even better effect. Plutarch (46-122 AD) suggested fassolatha (a bean soup, the national dish of Greece) as the way to a strong libido, and others believed that artichokes were not only aphrodisiacs but also ensured the birth of sons.

     Edible bulbs were known for their libido-enhancing functions, often mixed with honey and sesame seeds. From the most ancient of times, garlic was believed to have magical and therapeutic properties, and was also considered an aphrodisiac.
Plutarch

     The phallic shape of the leek led the Greeks to believe that this vegetable had sexually stimulating properties. In many pasts of the world, different mushrooms were said to be aphrodisiacs. For the Greeks, the favorite was the truffle. Like garlic, the Greeks ate onions regularly, another edible bulb, believed to be an aphrodisiac.
     Satirio is a type of wild orchid, said to be an aphrodisiac by Dioscorides (40-90 AD). Stafylinos was a plant which grew from seed in the wild and was believed to heighten sexual desire, so much so that it was known as a 'sex potion'.

     Mint was thought by some (Hippocrates) to dilute sperm, hinder erection, and tire the body. Others believed that the effects of mint would heighten sexual arousal.
     Aristotle was said to have advised Alexander the Great (356-323 BC) not to allow his soldiers to drink mint tea during campaigns because he believed it to be an aphrodisiac.
Aristotle

     The ancient Egyptians also had their own love mixtures. Lettuce was thought to be the favourite food of the fertility god, Min who was depicted as a god with an erect penis, wearing a feathered crown and carrying a flail. Lettuce was his sacred plant, and an aphrodisiac to the ancient Egyptians - this particular species of lettuce was tall, straight and secreted a milky substance when pressed. As in Greece, the onion was considered an aphrodisiac. They were forbidden to the priests who had vowed celibacy, for fear that their passion might take over, and that they might desecrate themselves.

     Other Egyptian favourites included fennel, ginger, pomegranates, coriander in wine and radishes mixed with honey. The Lotus was also a symbol of sexuality, immortality and health. The Egyptians might have used it for its narcotic effects and possibly as a sexual stimulant. Other 'less conservative' aphrodisiacs used by the Egyptians included pearls dissolved in wine and baboon faeces added to aphrodisiac ointments.
   
The Egyptian Min
     Nearly every food from artichoke to passion fruit has been considered an aphrodisiac. The ancient Romans were said to prefer such exotic aphrodisiacs as hippo snouts and hyena eyeballs. Traditional Chinese medicine suggested the use of rare delicacies such as rhino horn.
     Foods that are exotic or suggestive of certain body parts are also favoured as aphrodisiacs. The avocado tree, for example, was called a 'testicle tree' (Ahuacuatl) by the Aztecs because its fruit hangs in pairs (its aphrodisiac value is based on this resemblance) even with the typical testicular structure of one hanging lower than the other.

     The phallus-shaped carrot has been associated with sexual stimulation since ancient times and was used by early Middle Eastern royalty to aid seduction. The fig is claimed to be an aphrodisiac, based on its appearance.
     Sometimes edible aphrodisiacs are more myth than truth. Oysters were first called aphrodisiacs by the ancient Romans who wrote about the immoral behavior of women who ate them.
The 'Testicle Tree'

     Oysters are high in zinc, which is supposed to increase sperm count. They are also high in omega-3 fatty acids, which improves  nervous system function. The banana, considered an aphrodisiac due to its shape, is rich in potassium and B vitamins, which are said to be necessary for sex-hormone production.

      The 16th-century Arabic love guide 'The Perfumed Garden', tells the story of the priapic lover who remained constantly erect for 30 straight days simply by gobbling onions through the course of his lovemaking.

     Another new world fruit considered to be an aphrodisiac was the tomato. When first brought to Europe, tomatoes were thought to be the famous forbidden fruit of the Garden of Eden  and were called 'love apples'.
   
Oysters as Aphrodisiacs
       

     The cacao bean harvest for the Aztecs created orgiastic rituals that went on for weeks, and Montezuma himself is said to have primed his pump with 50 cups of cacao drink before servicing his 600 wives.

   


   
   Asia is a special region of the world for aphrodisiacs. The menu of 'The Snake King Completely Restaurant' in Guandong, China serves snake 75 different ways, and each serving is considered an excellent source for strengthening the 'yang' (the masculine active principle in nature).


     'Five Snake Wine' with five snakes in each bottle gives you 'luck' ('5' is considered a most favorable number-see post: Fun With Numbers). Dog is thought to be very beneficial for the yang, and it is usually one of the ingredients in 'Five Penis Wine' found in China.
   
Montezuma

     Or, if you prefer, 'Three Penis Wine', a mixture of seal penis, deer penis and Cantonese dog penis...just to be sure. A mixture of dog genitals is sold at markets in China, Korea, Vietnam, and Japan and is used in soup and wine to warm the blood and enhance virility.

     In China, sea cucumber is called the 'Ginseng of the Sea' because it has a long, thick, muscular form that swells to the touch. Shark's fin soup and jellyfish have been known as penile stimulants.
Three Penis Wine

      


     A restaurant in LeMat, Vietnam serves cobra (a potent aphrodisiac) brought to your table with its throbbing heart excised and popped into a shot glass, the blood and bile added in, and the shot glass topped off with a brandy composed of fermented snake and rice whiskey. Still, in Vietnam, four raw cat gall bladders pickled in wine causes excitement for men.

       Penis eating extends to the 'bull pizzler' which can be found frozen in markets. Dried tiger penis and powdered rhino horn are popular but expensive aphrodisiacs which 'offer the strength and stamina of the beasts' to the diner.

A Sea Cucumber


   
     In Japan, the pulverized genitals of the fugu blowfish mixed with hot sake illegal, expensive, and amazingly dangerous. Fugu toxin, if improperly prepared, is 250 times more deadly than cyanide, and some 20 diners per year in Japan succumb to its lure. Despite this, fugu blowfish testicles are a popular way of enhancing (usually, a man's) prowess.
Poached Rhino Horn-
Ready for Market


        Other Asian aphrodisiacs include: Balut, the 18-day-old embryos of ducks are popular in the Philippines and are called 'ho bit long' in Vietnam; the delicious durian fruit, described as 'carrion in a custard' and like 'eating pudding in an outhouse' because of its putrid smell.


Fugu Blowfish

   
   
     The durian fruit is believed to stimulate the genitals, if the eater can get beyond the smell; deep-fried tarantulas are sought after in Cambodia; bat blood wine is an aphrodisiac in the South Pacific; stewed crocodile meat in Thailand.

        In Victorian times, nearly any new drug that came on to the market was said to have aphrodisiac qualities, including opium, morphine (see post: The Opium Eaters) and cocaine.
     Dr. (Sir) Richard Quain wrote the 'Dictionary of Medicine' and, in the 1882 edition listed strychnine, cannabis, phosphorus and arsenic as aphrodisiacs.

     Arsenic-eaters were known throughout Europe and America. Chronic arsenic consumption produced a 'fresh complexion, round, firm, smooth skin, and shining hair (and eventually, death). In the US, male and female arsenic-eaters, known as 'dippers' put doses in their coffee. For men, arsenic apparently resulted in prolonged erections (priapism) and although most men died from prolonged use and the resultant anemia it caused, it was said that 'they died standing like men of the world'.
     Aside from folklore, myth and the simple desire to 'stay young forever', the search for sexual-enhancing drugs has been taken on by science and the pharmaceutical industry. Like many discoveries in the field of medicine, the effects of 'heightened sexual desire' produced by certain compounds was revealed when investigating a compound for completely unrelated purposes.
Tarantula-Best When Deep-Fried

     Viagra, for instance, was a drug first being investigated for its use in the treatment of heart problems and, during trials, was found to have the effect of prolonging penile erections.
     Poppers is slang term used for various types of inhaled alkyl nitrites. Amyl nitrite is used medically as an antidote for cyanide poisoning and was originally pioneered by Scottish physician, Sir Thomas Lauder Brunton as a treatment for angina pectoris ('pre-heart attack' pain). Amyl nitrite is present in products such as video head cleaner, air freshener and finger nail polish remover and are often inhaled with the goal of enhancing sexual pleasure. 
Sir Richard Quain

     Bremelanotide was developed from the peptide, melanotan II, first investigatedas a sunless tanning agent. Melanotan II did induce tanning but additionally caused sexual arousal and spontaneous erections  90% of male volunteer test subjects and increased sexual arousal in female volunteers.Different from Viagra, bremelanotide does not act upon the blood circulatory system, but rather directly increases sexual desire by acting on the nervous system.

      Crocin is a natural chemical compound that is found in the flowers crocus and gardenia.
Poppers

     Crocin has been shown to have  antioxidant and anticarcinogenic effects; in rats, antidepressant properties and some studies report aphrodisiac properties. Other tests demonstrate the efficacy of saffron as an aphrodisiac (a spice derived from the flower of Crocus sativus, the saffron crocus).
      Chocolate or rather phenylethylamine, the 'active' chemical in chocolate has been reported to increase sexual attraction and cause sexual arousal.
Saffron Crocus

     Sexual arousal is linked to levels of sex hormones, particularly testosterone. When a reduced sex drive occurs in individuals with relatively low levels of testosterone, such as post-menopausal women or men over age 60, testosterone supplements will often increase libido.

      Yohimbine is the main alkyloid of Yohimbe, another product derived from the psychoactive plant bark of an African tree (see post: A Drug to See the Dead). Yohimbe has been approved in the US for treatment of impotence. It is widely distributed without prescription as an herbal aphrodisiac.

     Stimulants affecting the dopamine neurotransmitter system (see post: The Genetics of Addiction) such as cocaine and amphetamines have been associated with hyperarousal and hypersexuality but have been shown to impair sexual functioning, particularly with long-term use.
Yohimbe Tree

     Ambergris is a solid, waxy, flammable substance of a dull gray or blackish color and, when 'fresh', smells much like the sea and excrement. With age, it acquires a sweet, 'earthy odour'. Historically, ambergris was used as in the manufacture of perfume. This substance is the biliary secretion of the intestines of the sperm whale and can be found floating upon the sea, or in the sand near the coast.

     Ancient Egyptians burned ambergris as incense and in modern Egypt, ambergris is used as a scent in cigarettes.The ancient Chinese called the substance 'dragon's spittle fragrance'. Other uses for ambergris have been as flavouring in foods, medication for headaches, epilepsy and colds and, of course, this biliary secretion of the sperm whale has been used as an aphrodisiac.
Ambergris

     In today's world, ambergris is one of the most expensive of all aphrodisiacs, selling at over 90 Euros (about $130 US) per gram.
     Of all the aphrodisiacs used in history, perhaps the most most famous is the Spanish fly, an emerald-green 'blister beetle' ( Lytta vesicatoria). Cantharidin is a powerful blister-inducing substance claimed to have aphrodisiac properties due to its irritant effects upon the body's genitourinary tract. Hippocrates used plasters made from wings of these beetles used to 'raise blisters'. In ancient China, the beetles were mixed with human excrement, arsenic and wolfbane to make the world's first recorded stink bomb.
   
The Sperm Whale
     The history of spanish fly dates back to Roman times. Livia, the wife of Augustus Caesar, slipped it into food hoping to inspire her guests to some indiscretion that she could later use as blackmail. 
     Henry I V (1050–1106) is known to have consumed Spanish fly.

     The French seem to have always loved their aphrodisiacs. In the 1670s, Spanish fly was mixed with dried moles and bat's blood for a love charm made by the magician La Voisin, 'sorceress' during the reign of Loius XIV, slipped into the food of Loius XIV to secure the king's lust for Madame de Montespan.
Spanish Fly
     In the 18th century, cantharides (spanish fly) became fashionable, known as pastilles Richelieu in France.

     The Marquis de Sade is said to have given aniseed-flavored pastilles that were laced with Spanish fly to prostitutes at an orgy in 1772. He was sentenced to death for poisoning and sodomy (later reprieved).

The 'Sorceress' La Voisin

      But, as with so many 'good' drugs, there is often an undesirable aspect. In powder form, mixed with the food, cantharide can go unnoticed.

     Called Aqua toffana or aquetta di Napoli, it was one of the poisons associated with the Medicis. Four to six drops of this poison in water or wine was enough to deliver death in a few hours.
   
     Since the beginning of time, it seems, food and sexual delight have gone hand in hand. From the poorest to the most wealthy, everyone wants to have their delights.     
The Marquis de Sade 'At Work'
   
     Even Madame de Pompadour (consort of the king) ate truffles, vanilla, and celery (her own special 'jet fuel') to heighten her desire for Louis XIV.

     *The history of drug use: subject of research for the novels The Tao of the Thirteenth God - Amazon KindleThe Judas Kiss- Amazon Kindle